Wamsutta
Well-known member
They be the real thing. You can tell by the internal rail. 


The larger sockets, especially the deep wells, have that shoulder created by the broaching process that physically blocks the bolt threads from passing through them when the nut is is on a stud or treaded further down on a bolt. It's common in aviation to see self locking nuts combined with longer than usual bolt threads as a safety feature. They will work fine, but I will have to machine the shoulder down first. I'm not super concerned about the finish, but the 1 inch deep well in the picture has very thin wall thicknesses that aren't an issue with any of the other larger sockets.
I do plan to call customer service, but I work nights and it will be in the middle of my sleep schedule, hence why I sent the email. However, I don't think it should be necessary to constantly pester them to get it done. I'm also less than thrilled to have to warranty so many sockets for legitimate functionality issues when I have never needed to warranty a brand new hand tool in two decades of profession wrenching.
That shoulder is intentional. Its actually rare to find a socket manufacturer that doesn't install it anymore.
Please post a picture where a stud is too big to fit through the hole left. That's fantasy land. Studs fit. The only legitimate complaint is stacked nuts.
On the right is the 7/8 deep and it is one of the most functional, well machined and perfectly finished sockets I have ever seen, this thing is seriously a masterpiece.
Which brand is that one?
It is also SK and it was from the exact same set.
I recently purchased a few new sets of SK SAE 12-point sockets in various lengths and drives for an aviation maintenance tool box. All of the sockets 5/16 and below were extremely rough on the inside, so much so that they didn't fit properly on 12-point nuts. Is this a normal thing for new Sk sockets, or did I draw the short straw and end up with four separate sets of pre-Ideal stock? I sent an e-mail to SK asking about warranty, but only received a response that they would forward it to the quality department and nothing since.
The attached pictures are of the 3/8 Drive 1/4 socket. I wiped the gray corrosion preventative coating off from this socket, so I'm assuming the bits sticking up are either metal from the manufacturing process or flaking chrome.
Wow, those two sockets are night and day difference, holy ****. You're right the one on the right is a masterpiece, and the left one an abomination![]()
Have you heard back from SK yet?
I'm sorry if I came off as combative, I actually agree with you on the first point. All of the sockets between 7/8 and 5/16 have perfectly formed shoulders and plenty of room for the bolt/stud, and I absolutely prefer this to the fully broached Snap-on sockets I use at my primary job. However, the 15/16 and 1 inch sockets have a shoulder that is formed by pressing excess material from the splines into the center of the socket, which is then bent out of the way to create a pass through for the bolt/stud. For some reason they chose not to machine the excess material out of the way.
I'll try and snag some old hardware for a demonstration, but in the meantime here picture is of two sockets from the same set:
On the right is the 7/8 deep and it is one of the most functional, well machined and perfectly finished sockets I have ever seen, this thing is seriously a masterpiece. You can see that the shoulder only just barely extends past the splines, leaving .879" of clearance for a bolt.
On the left is the 1" deep, which has the shoulders formed by pressing the excess material from the splines into the bore. There is only .744" inches of clearance for the bolt on this one, which is apparently just small enough to catch the threads of the bolts I was using. You can see where I cracked the shoulder trying to get it to fit. You can also see some rust that was hiding under that gray paint they coat these things in. This particular socket appears to have missed some finishing steps. The 15/16 looks much nicer, but has the same clearance issues.
I have sockets that look like both of what you pictured and never had an issue with them. I am lost on your issue with the broach on both of these sockets. Different designed broach or process, but nothing wrong with either one. All companies have different designs and depths to their broaching, there isn't a right or wrong depth or design.
Just curious.......do you ever plan on using these sockets? Ever plan on getting them greasy, scratched, dinged, dropped or even slightly abused? Or are you a tool polisher?
Wow, those two sockets are night and day difference, holy ****. You're right the one on the right is a masterpiece, and the left one an abomination![]()
"sure drive" (aka off corner grooves, or whatever SK calls it) grooves just not there...
Aren’t SKs painted inside for rust during potential warehouse storage or something? I feel like this was a discussion a few years ago.
I have sockets that look like both of what you pictured and never had an issue with them. I am lost on your issue with the broach on both of these sockets. Different designed broach or process, but nothing wrong with either one. All companies have different designs and depths to their broaching, there isn't a right or wrong depth or design.
Just curious.......do you ever plan on using these sockets? Ever plan on getting them greasy, scratched, dinged, dropped or even slightly abused? Or are you a tool polisher?
One on the right is cold forged, one on the left is likely hot pressed and machined (hence the machining marks below the broach petals). SK machines the larger sizes since cold forging large sizes requires massive amounts of force.
Regardless of the broaching method, the hole in the middle should be big enough to fit a standard threaded rod of the corresponding size to that socket through it. If it's not, OP should make that clear to SK since they will need to widen it. Or maybe OP is using a non standard/larger than expected rod.
That part is just not possible. Sockets are broached in one go, the off corner engagement simply can't be missing unless the broach shatters during broaching, in which case the socket is ruined.
Other issues you mentioned are all possibilities though.
Yup. I'll repost this again (https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showpost.php?p=5413833&postcount=12).
I purchased some metric 1/4" and 3/8" standard/deep sets a few months back and SEVERAL of them were just plain embarrassing, and I'm far from a tool polisher. From the finish to the broaching being off center/incomplete, to the drive end not having any ball retention divots, to the "sure drive" (aka off corner grooves, or whatever SK calls it) grooves just not there...I was pretty damn disappointed. I cherry picked the real bad ones and gave SK a call for replacements. They were pleasant, and they ensured me that they'd make sure I got good QC'd replacements. A few weeks later I got them in the mail and whattaya know, half of these ones were just as bad. I was pissed, but mostly disappointed. I got these to replace my spotty USA CMan sets, welp, scrapped that idea. Contacted the retailer I bought them from and returned them for a refund. What a waste of time.
My Tekton trunk set is leagues better, I still find that hard to believe. OP, you're not the first person to receive junk sockets from SK. I honestly wouldn't waste my time with warrantying them. Return them and go for something like Proto, etc.
Here are the nuts I'm dealing with. This particular one is 3/4, but you can get an idea of why I'm having issues with the broaching.
That part is just not possible. Sockets are broached in one go, the off corner engagement simply can't be missing unless the broach shatters during broaching, in which case the socket is ruined.

Here are the nuts I'm dealing with. This particular one is 3/4, but you can get an idea of why I'm having issues with the broaching.
What makes you so sure? Did you personally go through my order? Think I'm making it up? Haha at least half of the sockets I received didn't have them. Period. End of story.
The sockets were such junk that the only thing that makes sense of what I received is bad/worn out tooling.
Didn't grab the best pics of that issue in particular, but you can kind of see it in this one...among other things
![]()
Basically had the same experience... even the warranty replacements had the same flaws. Took in some cases 3x tries to get a "satisfactory" sockets.
In the end I kept the sockets and have been using them happily. However that initial experience left mixed feelings. On the one hand I got a low-cost US made socket set, but on another the quality-control was a bit disappointing... like the customer was the final QA.
They did tell me that various sockets are run off in batches and they grab from bins to full-fill orders. It possible that entire batches are afflicted in some manner.
My sockets look just like that also. Off center broaching, chatter marks from the broach, no sign of the off corner engagement relief. Agreed it is a tooling issue. How did these get past inspection? Isn’t someone from SK on this board? There are at least half a dozen from my 1/4 set like this.
What makes you so sure? Did you personally go through my order? Think I'm making it up? Haha at least half of the sockets I received didn't have them. Period. End of story.
The sockets were such junk that the only thing that makes sense of what I received is bad/worn out tooling.
Didn't grab the best pics of that issue in particular, but you can kind of see it in this one...among other things
![]()
That's pretty bad for a premium first world produced tool. I just bought a 1/4" 46 piece socket set for my 6y/o nephew to play with. It was the cheapest set with the most tools I could find on eBay. It had both short & deep knurled socket sets, 72t ratchet and a bunch of extensions, bit sockets etc from China. It was $16 delivered and the broaching and chrome was surprisingly decent. I would have happily used the tools. I too would be annoyed buying SK sockets & receiving junk like that, hope they send you out something decent for warranty.
Here are the nuts I'm dealing with. This particular one is 3/4, but you can get an idea of why I'm having issues with the broaching.
Yeah, it was embarrassing and disappointing (and a waste of time). They did send out some replacements (I called about the really bad ones) and at least half of the replacements were just as bad. I had it after that and just returned my order.
This was at the end of last year, so very much Ideal-era tools here. Some of my other SK tools are great. I can say with confidence that SK sockets (if bought ~now) just are not worth the time or money. Junk with a capital J.